Germany's premium carmakers are collaborating to build technology expertise necessary to take on new rivals like Uber and Google.

For representational purpose. (Photo: AFP Relaxnews)

German car makers Audi, BMW and Daimler have launched an alliance with mobile telecoms network equipment firms Ericsson, Huawei, Intel, Nokia and Qualcomm to accelerate development of the infrastructure needed for self-driving cars.

The pact is another example of Germany's premium carmakers collaborating to build technology expertise necessary to take on new rivals like Uber and Google which are also working on the autonomous driving technology.

The new alliance, branded the 5G Automotive Association, will "develop, test and promote communications solutions, support standardisation and accelerate the commercial availability and global market penetration," the founders said in a statement.

One of the aims of 5G, the technology standards for the next generation of much faster and more reliable mobile telecoms networks, is to enable a wide variety of devices to connect up and operate via the Internet - the "Internet of Things."

Network equipment providers such as Ericsson and Nokia have said the 5G technology currently in development could be available for use as early as next year but mass-market upgrades to mobile networks are not expected until sometime around 2020.

A spokesman for the newly formed partnership said there were talks with several network operators to join the association, declining to give any names.